1.

Record Nr.

UNINA9910821807703321

Titolo

Hyphenated histories : articulations of Central European Bildung and Slavic studies in the contemporary academy / / edited By Andrew Colin Gow

Pubbl/distr/stampa

Leiden ; ; Boston, : Brill, 2007

ISBN

1-281-93692-8

9786611936921

90-474-2267-8

Edizione

[1st ed.]

Descrizione fisica

1 online resource (225 p.)

Collana

Brill eBook titles 2007

Altri autori (Persone)

GowAndrew Colin

Disciplina

001.3071

Soggetti

Humanities - Study and teaching (Higher)

Culture - Study and teaching (Higher)

Interdisciplinary approach in education

Interdisciplinary research

Education, Humanistic - Europe, Central

Slavic countries Civilization Congresses

Lingua di pubblicazione

Inglese

Formato

Materiale a stampa

Livello bibliografico

Monografia

Note generali

Proceedings of a conference held in 2005 at the University of Alberta.

Nota di bibliografia

Includes bibliographical references and index.

Nota di contenuto

The future of the humanities and humanities-history in the automatic university / Andrew Gow --  Beyond Bildung : the "Disciplinarity and dissent" of  cultural studies in the global managerial academy /  Markus Reisenleitner -- Of ruinous and wasted idylls : the modesty  of a once-and-future literary history / Susan Ingram -- Of crescents and essence, or, Why migrants' history matters to the question of 'Central European colonialism' / Wladimir Fischer --  Robinson Crusoes, prostitutes, heroes? : constructing  the 'Ukrainian labour emigrant' in Ukraine  /  Natalia Khanenko Friesen -- The politics of language and popular culture in Dziga Vertov's "Man with a movie camera" /  Andriy  Zayarnyuk -- Inverted perspective and Serbian peasants : antiquities and the Byzantine revival in Serbia /  Marko Zivkovic -- Spectacles of pain : Susan Sontag and Russian World  War II photography /  Elena  Siemens -- Imagining a Soviet nation : cultural representations of  the Ukrainian past at the twilight of the Stalin era / Serhy  Yekelchyk.



Sommario/riassunto

Art history, literary history, film history, social history, micro-history, economic history, women’s history, postcolonial history and other hyphenated histories have introduced elements of discontinuity, rupture and plurality into hegemonic historical narratives by initiating interdisciplinary encounters that have not only redefined and rewritten debates over the terrain of the past, but have shared a common problematic with, and thus have left indelible traces in, the global syntax of theory itself. Rather than focusing on 'Grand Theory', we have explored some of these issues in our own areas. The first section of the volume is more general and tries to make sense of current institutional realities; the second section consists of case studies, demonstrating how the various disciplinary divisions of Slavic Studies can be overcome by adding together various hyphenated approaches: history and cultural studies, anthropology and oral history, film studies and photography. Contributors include: Wladimir Fischer, Natalka Khanenko Friesen, Andrew Colin Gow, Susan Ingram, Markus Reisenleitner, Elena Siemens, Serhy Yekelchyk, Andriy Zayarnyuk, and Marko Živković.